OXFORD, Miss.  You could say novelist
Tom Franklin raised Hell during his year as Grisham
Writer-in-Residence at the University of Mississippi.

His forthcoming novel is Hell at the Breech,
a fictionalized history of brutal events that took place 12 miles from his Alabama
home. Franklin leaves the prestigious UM post savoring the opportunity to work
in American novelist William Faulkners backyard.

I could wander downstairs from my marvelous
office and be on Faulkners land in five minutes, said Franklin,
who came to Oxford after a stint as a visiting writer-in-residence at Knox College
in Galesburg, Ill. Walking the place has helped me tremendously; its
much better than Illinois to a guy writing about a Southern landscape.

Franklin soon assumes a similar position at
the University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn. Upon leaving UM, he joins an impressive
group of other former Grisham writers, including T.R. Pearson, Mary Hood, Darcey
Steinke, Steve Yarbrough and Claude Willkinson.

I enjoyed the students here (at UM). Theyre
very smart, and the best of them are the best Ive seen anywhere,
said Franklin, who last year was one of 183 Guggenheim fellows in the U.S. and
Canada.

Having to say farewell to extremely talented
people is the only downside to the Grisham program, said Joseph Urgo, chair
of the UM Department of English. Tom Franklin has been a tremendous asset
to us this year; in a short time he attracted a strong and loyal following among
our students, Urgo said. We'll look forward to following his post-Grisham
career.

During the year, Franklin taught undergraduate
and graduate students in a two-semester fiction writing class. You write
for the joy of it; publication is a bonus, he told a group of aspiring
writers at the 2001 Oxford Conference for the Book, sponsored in part by UM.
He praised the Grisham program for its tangible provisions: writing time and
financial support.

The intangibles, also of tremendous benefit,
include living in this very literary town just a block from Faulkners
estate and knowing that writers I admire have shown such confidence in my future
that they wanted me to spend a year writing, he said.

A native of Dickinson, Ala., Franklin remains
connected indirectly to the University of Mississippi, with his wife, Beth Ann
Fennelly, joining the UM English faculty this fall as a visiting professor in
poetry and literary studies. Open House, her first book of poems, won
the 2001 Kenyon Review Prize in Poetry for a First Book, one of the nations
most prestigious awards for new authors.

The annual appointment, which includes housing
and a stipend, was funded in 1993 by best-selling author John
Grisham and his wife, Renee. It requires writers to teach writing workshops
and participate in department activities.